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Please pray for these Children!

Many dangers for child survivors of cyclone in Myanmar



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Children waited for clean water on the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar, on Friday.

(source: The Associated Press)
Article by Seth Mydans

BANGKOK: At risk of disease, abuse and forced recruitment into the armed forces, children are the most vulnerable survivors of the cyclone that hit Myanmar, many of them orphaned or lost, fending for themselves.

As huge rainstorms drench the often-homeless survivors of the May 3 storm, with clean water scarce and aid slow to arrive, relief workers said in the past week that children may make up the majority of the next expected wave of death: victims of an epidemic of water-borne diseases. Since many Burmese children are malnourished, their immune systems are weaker, and if they are hungry or thirsty, they are really at risk, said Kate Conradt, a spokeswoman for Save the Children in Bangkok.

The weakest members of a shattered society, surrounded by strangers in crowded refugee camps, the children are vulnerable to abuse and to recruitment as laborers, sex workers or child soldiers, relief agencies say.

Myanmar has one of the world's highest rates of recruitment of child soldiers, who are often purchased, kidnapped or terrorized into joining the army. Some of the recruits are as young as 10, according to a recent report by Human Rights Watch, based in New York.

The report, issued last October, said that military recruiters and civilian brokers scour train stations, bus stations, markets and other public places for boys and coerce them to volunteer. The chaos of the refugee camps offers particular opportunities for them.

"That's a deep concern because unscrupulous recruiters will certainly take advantage of the situation," said David Mathieson, an expert on Myanmar with Human Rights Watch.

Already, news has circulated among aid groups of two brokers who were arrested as they attempted to recruit children at a shelter, said Anne-Claire Dufay, the chief child protection officer for Unicef in Myanmar.

Relief agencies estimate that children make up one-third of the survivors of the cyclone, which took tens of thousands of lives.

No matter how much aid reaches them, they face a future of hardship.

When the school year starts in two weeks, the children will find 85 percent of their schools in ruins and many of their teachers gone, relief workers say. The destruction of schools illustrates the scale of the challenge that Myanmar will face in returning to normal life: About 2,700 schools will have to be rebuilt, according to Unicef.

Children suffered from the very beginning. Relief groups estimate that they made up about one-third of those killed by the devastating cyclone. Many of the child survivors are orphans or are unaccompanied by any family member and are vulnerable in crowded shelters that lack private toilet or bathing areas.

"It's survival of the fittest," said Fred Bemak, a professor of counseling at George Mason University in Virginia, who was in Yangon, the main city of Myanmar, training counselors when the cyclone hit.

"Their schools are gone, their homes are gone, their parents are often dead or lost," he said. "Many children are wandering around separated from their families and communities, and they are highly vulnerable right now."

The youngest children may not know their surnames, their parents' names or the names of their villages, Conradt said - and there is no system in place for reuniting families.

"Our experience is when resources are very scarce and the relief operation is on, the unaccompanied children are the ones who pay the toll," said Alex Kreuger, a child protection specialist with Unicef.

Child protection workers are trying to offer some refuge by setting up what they call child-friendly spaces where children can mingle and play safely and attempt to overcome their traumas.

"They get a bit of informal education and they play with each other and have fun," said Laura Blank, a spokeswoman for World Vision, which is opening up 37 centers in Yangon. "Through that process, we are bringing a little bit of joy into their lives."

In the chaotic aftermath of the cyclone, with little access to the worst-hit areas, relief agencies can only guess at the number of dead. On Friday, Myanmar state television said the official death toll had increased to nearly 78,000, from 43,000. The United Nations estimate was 100,000 and others went much higher. The number of survivors cited and the estimates of needy children were also only approximations.

Citing a United Nations estimate Friday, Unicef said that as many as 40 percent of those affected were children and that "there may be as many as one million children in urgent need of assistance." Based on a different UN estimate of 1.5 million people who have been "severely affected," World Vision estimated Wednesday that half a million children were left alive by the waves and are now in need of urgent help.

Diplomats to get delta tour

A top U.S. envoy said the Myanmar military regime would take foreign diplomats on a tour for the first time of the cyclone-hit Irrawaddy Delta, The Associated Press reported Friday from Yangon. Shari Villarosa, the chargé d'affaires of the U.S. Embassy in Myanmar, said the Myanmar Foreign Ministry planned to take diplomats into the delta Saturday.



Prayer for Children:
God, we pray that through the
intercessions of St. Nicholas
you will guide and protect our children.

Keep them safe from all harm
and help them grow to become
loving disciples of Jesus in your sight.

Give them strength to always mature
into deeper faith in you,
and to keep alive joy in your creation.

Through Jesus Christ Our Lord. Amen.


Prayer:

Wonder-working follower of Christ,
From your early years you practiced fasting
And were outstanding in generosity.
You quickly distributed to the poor
What you had inherited from your parents.
Traveling to Palestine, you became a bishop
And dared to preach the Gospel
For which you were thrown into prison.
As “Santa Claus” you are still loved today.
Teach us to be generous like you!


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SIGNS OF AN ABUSIVE RELATIONSHIP

Do you:

  • feel afraid of your partner much of the time?
  • avoid certain topics fear of angering your partner?
  • feel that you can’t do anything right for your partner?
  • believe that you deserve to be hurt or mistreated?
  • wonder if you’re the one who is crazy?
  • feel emotionally numb or helpless?


    Does your partner:

    • humiliate, criticize, or yell at you?
    • treat you so badly that you’re embarrassed for your friends or family to see?
    • ignore or put down your opinions or accomplishments?
    • blame you for his own abusive behavior?
    • see you as property or a sex object, rather than as a person?

    Does your partner:

  • have a bad and unpredictable temper?
  • hurt you, or threaten to hurt or kill you?
  • threaten to take your children away or harm them?
  • threaten to commit suicide if you leave?
  • force you to have sex?
  • destroy your belongings?


    Does your partner:

    • act excessively jealous and possessive?
    • control where you go or what you do?
    • keep you from seeing your friends or family?
    • limit your access to money, the phone, or the car?
    • constantly check up on you?
  • Published Saturday, May 17, 2008 3:33 AM by Wysteria Blossom
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